Weโre recognizing the power and strength of women in the outdoors this month, and in this space we’re going to acknowledge that by talking about fear. Fear is a giftโnot a curse, not a burden, and not something to be avoided. Stick with me, itโll make sense soon. It flows into my argument about self-defense for women.
THE BEAR AND THE MAN
If youโve spent much time on social media lately, youโve seen the memes and random arguments over the man vs. bear question. No, this isnโt about the TV show only some of us remember. This is about the question of whether women in the outdoors alone in the woods would prefer to run into a man or a bear. The rules are that we know nothing about the man (or the bear). Itโs a stranger, and itโs safe to assume said man randomly appears in the middle of a mountain range or a forest where you didnโt expect to run into another person. Women overwhelmingly stated they chose the bear, which prompted much angst and fighting on both sides.
This isnโt about the man or the bear, though. This is about fear.
RESISTANCE TO FEAR
Mark Twain wrote that โcourage is resistance to fearโฆ mastery of fearโฆnot absence of fear.โ Iโd expand on that by reminding you that fear is healthy. We all have that primal hindbrain response to danger, and fear is the reaction that saves us, if only we acknowledge it. And when it comes to self-defense, we donโt walk around armed because weโre afraid. We do it because we have a healthy respect and understanding of the realities of life. We know danger and risk are real, and weโre prepared to face itโscared or not.
Choosing the bear isnโt about fear, reallyโitโs about facing the predictably wild or the unpredictable, potential evil. Wild animals are pretty predictable, but humans are not. So, did this little social experiment mean women are living in fear? Of course not.
THE LITTLE WOMAN
There was a time when women were not only encouraged but expected to rely on the strength of a man for safety. Iโm not saying thereโs anything exactly wrong with feeling or being safe with a manโbecause thereโs notโbut only that women should be capable of protecting themselves. Thereโs no excuse for being helpless. We are not helpless, frail creatures whose very existence counts on the generosity of men. In fact, Iโd take that even further by saying we make better partners when weโre strong.
Learning to understand, channel, and utilize fear correctly can be tough. Everyone is different, and all women have varying responses to fearโreal or imagined. We must learn to properly recognize and analyze fear, handle an adrenaline dump, and take logical action despite whatever fear is rushing through our brains. Thereโs no reason to walk around in a constant state of fear and no reason to react to every person you encounter with fear, not when youโve worked to hone the correct mindset.
BUT WAITโฆBACK TO THE BEAR
Do you know why Iโd rather run into a bear in the woods? Because the bear belongs there and isnโt likely to bother me. And if he does bother me, well, Iโm armed.
READ THAT LAST SENTENCE AGAIN.
Now letโs say you’ve run into a strange, unpredictable man in the middle of the woods. Do you run in terror? Do you go on high alert, heart hammering, pulse-pounding? Or do you simply acknowledge that thereโs a person there and give their presence the importance it demands? Are you armed, or are you out there skipping through the fields of foxglove, hoping for the best? Are you Maria spinning on a mountaintop or Ripley on a spaceship?
You donโt avoid going hiking or camping out of fear youโll run into a stranger (at least I hope you donโt). And you donโt avoid the outdoors for fear a bear might materialize. But when youโre camping, you take precautions to discourage bears from invading your campsite, right? Youโre not leaving food lying around or otherwise putting out the welcome mat for wild animals, are you? Then why would you leave the proverbial door open for strangers who might mean you harm?
MAN, BEAR, WHATEVER
Ladies, you are your own first responder. No one is coming to save you and there are no knights on white horses. Itโs your job to rescue yourself. Being responsibly armed isnโt about fear, itโs about acknowledging that life is risk, and moving on. Youโre armed, youโre prepared, youโre participating in trainingโyouโre good to go.
Our lives are not and should not be about fear. Fear isnโt a curse, and it isnโt the exclusive property of women. Fear can be approached like a tool, an emotion that lets you know you should be paying attention and prepared to respond accordingly if the situation requires it. Fear isnโt a terminal illness; it is a gift.
Instead of worryingโor fightingโabout whether to choose the man or the bear, why not just choose the woods? Thereโs nothing more peaceful or healing than time spent in the outdoors.
Donโt let fear dictate your life. That doesnโt mean Iโm endorsing being stupid, only that letting fear over an imagined scenario stop you from living your life isnโt worth it. Donโt be a potential victim. Be a victor. Youโve got this, ladies. Forget the man, bear, hyena, whateverโchoose being responsibly armed, and choose time spent in the outdoors. You wonโt regret it.
See other Armed and Responsible columns by Kat Stevens
Per our affiliate disclosure, we may earn revenue from the products available on this page.